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Custom Resolution Utility (CRU)
Yesterday, 03:19 PM
Post: #8751
RE: Custom Resolution Utility (CRU)
Greetings everyone, I could use some help overclocking my monitor, I wonder what results can be achieved with a resolution of 1280x960 on an AOC 25G3ZM/BK 240 Hz monitor.

When trying to overclock, the monitor does not take a frequency higher than 240 hertz, maybe someone has ready-made settings for it? I would be very grateful.

Driver version 560.94, connection via DisplayPort 1.2, processor 12400F, Graphics card ASUS Rog Strix 1070 8 GB
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Yesterday, 06:09 PM
Post: #8752
RE: Custom Resolution Utility (CRU)
(Yesterday 03:19 PM)ggnormald Wrote:  Greetings everyone, I could use some help overclocking my monitor, I wonder what results can be achieved with a resolution of 1280x960 on an AOC 25G3ZM/BK 240 Hz monitor.

When trying to overclock, the monitor does not take a frequency higher than 240 hertz, maybe someone has ready-made settings for it? I would be very grateful.

Driver version 560.94, connection via DisplayPort 1.2, processor 12400F, Graphics card ASUS Rog Strix 1070 8 GB
If your monitor won't let you overclock, then you can't overclock.
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Today, 01:17 AM
Post: #8753
RE: Custom Resolution Utility (CRU)
Toasty (or anyone with Linux experience and crt monitors) could you let me know if this method for potentially universal compatibility for interlaced scan works for real? im asking because i came across this comment but havent been able to try it for myself.

"If you want interlaced video to work correctly with xrandr you are going to have to manually interlace it yourself since the interlace option is broken with modern gpus. Set the width of the resolution mode to what you want the full width of the output resolution to be. Set the height to be half of whatever desired height that you want for the resolution. Then use the --scale 1x2 option when outputting that resolution mode (this doubles the internal height of the image). It will look very blurry when nothing is moving on your screen vertically; however, in motion everything will look just fine and will in effect achieve the full resolution that you desire."


does that scale option truly turn the Linux rendering into interlaced scan?
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Today, 01:49 AM
Post: #8754
RE: Custom Resolution Utility (CRU)
(Today 01:17 AM)juanme555 Wrote:  Toasty (or anyone with Linux experience and crt monitors) could you let me know if this method for potentially universal compatibility for interlaced scan works for real? im asking because i came across this comment but havent been able to try it for myself.

"If you want interlaced video to work correctly with xrandr you are going to have to manually interlace it yourself since the interlace option is broken with modern gpus. Set the width of the resolution mode to what you want the full width of the output resolution to be. Set the height to be half of whatever desired height that you want for the resolution. Then use the --scale 1x2 option when outputting that resolution mode (this doubles the internal height of the image). It will look very blurry when nothing is moving on your screen vertically; however, in motion everything will look just fine and will in effect achieve the full resolution that you desire."


does that scale option truly turn the Linux rendering into interlaced scan?
That's just scaling the image down, so that's not the same. That's basically supersampling in the vertical direction.
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